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Q4 2019 Earnings Season Preview: 2 Sectors To Avoid, 1 To Buy

Published 15/01/2020, 08:58
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Wall Street's fourth quarter earnings season kicks off this week with 24 companies reporting, including major Wall Street banks such as JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM), Citigroup (NYSE:C), Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC), Bank of America (NYSE:BAC), Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) and Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS).

FactSet data shows analysts anticipate Q4 S&P 500 earnings will dive by 2.0% when compared to the same period last year, capping off another year of lackluster results. If confirmed, this will be the first time the index has posted four consecutive quarters of year-over-year declines in earnings since Q3 2015 through Q2 2016.

Six sectors are projected to announce a Y-o-Y deceleration in earnings, led by the Energy, Consumer Discretionary, and Materials sectors. On the other hand, five are predicted to publish annualized earnings growth, led by the Utilities and Financials sectors.

S&P 500 Earnings Growth: Q4 2019

Revenue expectations are equally unsettling. The predicted Q4 2019 Y-o-Y rate is just 2.6%, which would be the lowest rate of income growth for the index since Q2 2016.

Of the eleven sectors, three are forecast to report a drop in revenue Y-o-Y, led once again by the Materials and Energy sectors. Meanwhile, eight sectors are to show increases, with Health Care, Utilities, and Communication Services leading.

S&P 500 Revenue Growth: Q4 2019

2 Sectors Expected To Disappoint

1. Energy: Low Crude Oil And Gas Prices Weigh On The Sector

The Energy sector is forecast to print the highest Y-o-Y earnings losses of all eleven sectors, with a massive 36.8% fall in fourth-quarter EPS from a year earlier, according to FactSet. With low crude oil and gas prices burdening on the sector, it is expected to suffer the second-largest Y-o-Y plunge in revenue, at -7.2%.

XLE Daily Chart

Digging deeper, earnings from four of the six sub-industries are foreseen to decline more than 20%. Stocks in the Oil & Gas Drilling group are to fare the worst, with EPS estimated to plunge a staggering 75%. Earnings from Oil & Gas Refining & Marketing, and Integrated Oil & Gas companies are projected to plummet -51% and -46%.

Two companies from the group stand out for their potential to record significant decreases in earnings growth: Exxon Mobil (NYSE:XOM) and Chevron (NYSE:CVX). For Exxon, the mean Q4 2019 EPS estimate is $0.59, down 46% from EPS of $1.29 in the year ago period. For Chevron, the mean Q4 2019 EPS estimate is $1.55, more than 20% below EPS of $1.95 in the same period a year earlier.

Other notable names set to suffer a substantial reduction in their Q4 earnings per share are Occidental Petroleum (NYSE:OXY) and ConocoPhillips (NYSE:COP). Occidental Petroleum's mean Q4 2019 EPS estimate is $0.05, while a year ago it stood at $1.22. The mean Q4 EPS estimate for ConocoPhillips is $0.80, compared to $1.13 in the same period a year earlier.

2. Consumer Discretionary: Automobiles To Lead Sector Lower

The Consumer Discretionary sector is expected to report the second-highest Y-o-Y earnings decline of all eleven sectors, at a dismal -13.5%. Eight of the eleven sub-industries in the sector are forecast to post waning earnings, with four of those on track to suffer double-digit losses, led by auto stocks, which are to see their collective EPS nosedive 69% from a year ago.

XLY Daily Chart

Two of the three companies anticipated to lead the earnings slide for the sector are General Motors (NYSE:GM) and Ford (NYSE:F). For GM, which has already warned of a more than $2 billion hit to its fourth-quarter profits due to the impact of a 40-day strike at its U.S. factories in the fall, the mean Q4 2019 EPS estimate is $0.21, while the EPS a year ago was $1.43. For Ford, the mean Q4 2019 EPS estimate is $0.17, compared to the year ago EPS of $0.30.

Meanwhile, Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) is estimated to report the third-largest earnings reduction in the sector, with a mean Q4 EPS estimate of $4.05, compared to EPS of $6.04 in the same period a year earlier. The company's plan to continue spending on upgrading Amazon Prime's free one-day shipping is a major driver for this potential downswing.

Two more names set to report a significant slump in earnings per share: Gap (NYSE:GPS) and Hasbro (NASDAQ:HAS). The embattled apparel retailer has a mean Q4 2019 EPS estimate of $0.35, while the EPS a year ago was $0.71. Toy maker Hasbro's mean Q4 2019 EPS estimate is $0.95, compared to the year ago EPS of $1.33.

Look For Robust Results From This Sector

1. Utilities: All Sub-Industries To Report Growth

The Utilities sector could enjoy tailwinds from the Federal Reserve’s easy monetary policy, as it is expected to report the highest Y-o-Y earnings growth of all eleven sectors, with EPS to rise 19.5% compared to the year ago period.

All five of the sub-industries in the sector are anticipated to report EPS growth, with double-digit earnings growth from four: Independent Power and Renewable Electricity Producers (+138%), Multi-Utilities (+26%), Electric Utilities (+12%), and Gas Utilities (+12%).

Analysts name Utilities as the sector likely to report the second highest Y-o-Y revenue growth, at +9.8%. Three of the five sub-industries in the group are to list double-digit increases in revenues: Independent Power and Renewable Electricity Producers (+60%), Multi-Utilities (+16%), and Electric Utilities (+11%)

The Utilities Select Sector SPDR Fund (NYSE:XLU), is trading near all-time highs as the sector’s main ETF tends to outperform in low interest rate environments due to their attractive dividend yield. The ETF is up 18% over the past 12 months.

XLU Daily Chart

At a company level, Dominion Energy (NYSE:D) and American Electric Power (NYSE:AEP) are two to watch. Dominion's revenue forecast is $4.81 billion, an increase of 43% compared to sales of $3.36 billion a year ago, while AEP is expecting to report revenue of $4.03 billion, beating last year's $3.8 billion reading.

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